Some additional links:

Compare total editors per project (deduplicated) 
Caveat: only exists for active editors (5+ per month), not for very active 
editors (100+ edits per month)
https://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/ProjectTrendsEditors.html

Here is a table with total monthly editors for all Wikimedia wikis combined 
(deduplicated)
https://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/TablesWikimediaAllProjects_AllMonths.htm
and charts showing columns active editors 5+ and very active editors 100+ from 
that table.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Active_editors_over_all_Wikimedia_wikis_-_deduplicated.png

As for causes, WereSpielCheckers wrote an essay in 2013:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:WereSpielChequers/Going_off_the_boil%3F
and also did an 'In Focus' for Signpost in 2015:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2015-08-26/In_focus

As for edits, instead of editors:
On English Wikipedia monthly edits by registered users is visibly higher in 
2015 and 2016 than in 2013 and 2014 
https://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/PlotEditsEN.png  (blue line)  
BTW way anonymous and bot edits are also higher than their low point in 
preceding years, but these metrics don't count for active editors trends.
For similar charts for other Wikipedias see 
https://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/PlotsPngEditHistoryTop.htm

Erik Zachte

P.S. unrelated but good to know if you dive into Wikistats: February 2017 
reports are incomplete (under investigation) 

-----Original Message-----
From: Wikimedia-l [mailto:wikimedia-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of 
Alessandro Marchetti
Sent: Sunday, February 19, 2017 6:52
To: Wikimedia Mailing List
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Very good news!

These are data for English wikipedia, right?
You should compare the whole platforms. That's because bilingualism is 
increasing in many countries but not in the same direction. For example Italian 
students foreign language skills drastically increased over the last 10 years, 
so they edit also on English wikipedia. It's not sure that the opposite occurs. 
It's the same with emigration. Many 25-30 years old PhD students and Postdoc 
leave Italy and move to other countries. If that area is for example UK (a very 
common destination) they start to edit enwikipedia. This could happen also in 
France, whilst many of them have to learn German or Dutch or Swedish and it 
takes more time.
I "study" flow of users from platform, you can see when I leave welcome message 
or propose autopatrolled flag here and there and they are most probably 
asymmetrical at the moment.
If someone is interested, there are some way to try to sample this flows in an 
objective way. Happy to share with you.  

    Il Domenica 19 Febbraio 2017 3:33, Milos Rancic <mill...@gmail.com> ha 
scritto:
 

 This is an extraordinary news for us! For almost 10 years I was hoping to see 
that and, finally, I've seen it!

In short, it seems that we reached the bottom in participation in 2014 and that 
we are now slowly going upwards.

My claim is based on the analysis [1] of the Eric Zachte's participation 
statistics on English Wikipedia [2], but I am almost sure that the rest of the 
projects more or less mirror it. But, anyway, I encourage others to check other 
projects and other relevant factors and see if their results correlate with 
what I have found. The reasons for the change in trends should be also detected.

If we are looking Eric's statistics from 2010 onwards, it is not immediately 
obvious if we are going up or down. We reached the peak in
2007 (German Wikipedia somewhat earlier, other projects later, but English 
Wikipedia is approximately 50% of our activity and its weight is too strong for 
other projects to balance our overall activity).
After that peak, we went down as quickly as we reached the peak. Then, in 2010, 
the trends flattened.

However, it was not a stagnation, but barely visible recession.
However, that "barely visible recession" removed approximately 20% of the very 
active editors in the period from 2010 to 2014, while the "visible one" -- from 
2007 to 2010 -- was also approximately 20%. At that point of time, in 2014, the 
next 10 years would for sure drive Wikipedia and Wikimedia movement into 
insignificance.

Comparing such data is also tricky. It's not just necessary to compare the same 
months (January 2010 with January 2011, 2012 etc.), but there could be "freak" 
months, which are not following general trends.

That's why I used two methods: One is coloring the months by place in 
comparison to the months of the previous years. The other is average number per 
year.

There are at least a couple of important conclusions:

1) Negative trends have been reversed.

2) Both 2015 and 2016 were not just better than 2013 and 2014, but even better 
than 2012, while 2016 is just a little bit worse than 2011!

3) December 2016 was even better than December 2010!

4) I could guess that the period June-November 2016 was worse than the same 
period in 2015 because of the political turbulence. Without them
-- as May and December 2016 likely show -- 2016 would be not just better, but 
much better than 2015 and maybe even better than 2010.

I would say that the reversal is still fragile and that we should do whatever 
we've been doing the last two years. Yes, detecting what we've been doing good 
(or bad) is not that easy to detect. But, yes, better analysis of all of all of 
the processes should be definitely done.

I hope that this shows that we are at the beginning of our Renaissance, 
Wikimedia Renaissance and that the Dark Wikimedia Age is behind us! So, please 
join me in enjoying that fact, even I could be wrong. It definitely sounds 
definitely amazing, even it could be just my imagination! :)

[1] 
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1IXYoTI_nCBhhuJAknH5KL450_D3V67KWTHuoEAh6540/edit?usp=sharing
[2] https://stats.wikimedia.org/EN/ChartsWikipediaEN.htm

--
Milos

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